u/Annual-Ad-2495

A free index for AI learners — guides, prompts, skills, tools, glossary

Thought I'd share this here in case it's useful for someone.

I’ve been collecting and organizing practical AI resources in one place, mainly because the AI space is getting noisy quickly and it’s easy to get lost between tools, prompts, models, agents, coding workflows, and terminology.

What’s there:

- Learn — practical guides organized by category: foundations, building & shipping, stacks & systems

- Coding — a handbook for working with AI when building software: stack layers, handoff patterns, repo files, review loops

- Prompts — 115+ prompts across categories like code, productivity, analysis, writing, research, learning, and design

- Skills — 130+ role-based skills across packs like developer, sales, marketer, founder, HR, and customer success

- Tools — 180+ AI tools sorted by what they actually do

- Glossary — 80+ terms explained in plain English

- Compare — head-to-head comparisons between models and tools

If you’re just starting, Learn and Glossary are probably the best places to begin. If you’re already building things, Coding, Prompts, and Skills are probably more useful.

Free, no sign-up, no paywall. I'll throw the links in the comments

Have a good one!

reddit.com
u/Annual-Ad-2495 — 3 days ago

I built GoMate to make moving abroad less chaotic, looking for honest feedback

I’ve been working on GoMate for the past few months.

The idea came from how messy moving abroad can be. You end up jumping between government websites, Reddit threads, blogs, spreadsheets, and half-outdated advice just to understand what you need to prepare and what to do next.

GoMate tries to make that easier.

It gives people who are planning to move abroad a structured country guide and app flow covering things like visas, housing, healthcare, banking, local admin steps, and practical relocation blockers.

The goal is not to replace lawyers or immigration experts. It’s more like a pocket relocation consultant that helps you get clarity, understand what matters, and move forward with less chaos.

We’ve built both the marketing site and the app, covering 125 countries with data sourced from official government portals where possible.

The app is still early and has some known bugs/limitations, but we’ve paused active building for a bit because we need honest feedback before deciding what direction to take next. We don’t want to spend months polishing the wrong thing.

Site: gomaterelocate.com
App: app.gomaterelocate.com free to try

Straight up: is this shit or not?

What works, what doesn’t, what feels unclear, and where does it break?

I’m especially trying to figure out whether this is useful enough to keep building, what direction we should take it in, and whether I’m too close to the problem to judge it properly.

u/Annual-Ad-2495 — 5 days ago
▲ 1 r/replit

I joined Replit’s 10-year Buildathon this weekend and worked on something I’ve been building for a while, GoMate, an AI tool to help people moving abroad.

The idea came from a personal situation. My partner and I are trying to move to the same country, and we quickly realized how messy the process actually is, visas, documents, deadlines, everything scattered across different sources.

Before the Buildathon, this was basically a landing page and a fragile prototype that didn’t really work in practice.

During the 24 hours, I used Replit Agent to rebuild most of the core — and for the first time, it actually works end-to-end (still early, definitely bugs and limitations).

If anyone wants to check it out and give it a try:

👉 https://buildathons.replit.app/projects/7415c16a-0af3-4721-8ae1-48acb485b933

Would especially love feedback on the flow / output 🙏

u/Annual-Ad-2495 — 11 days ago

Built this over the past month as a free reference site for people getting into AI agents. What tools to use, where to start, what each tool does, and how the agent-tool landscape fits together.

The pieces most relevant here:

  • A page on agent tools and frameworks: Cline, Claude Code, Cursor agent mode, and the broader ecosystem. Tradeoffs, notes on MCP integration patterns, and tool use without writing TypeScript glue.
  • A coding section covering the agentic side: editors with agent modes, CLI agents, orchestration patterns, where HITL workflows actually break and what to do about it.
  • 128 hand-written Claude Skills across 12 packs, including ones with active tool use: web/browser automation, document handling, spreadsheets, diagrams. Each skill specifies required inputs, structure, anti-patterns, and the actual instructions Claude follows.

Free to use, no signup.

Hope it might be useful to someone. Have a good one.

reddit.com
u/Annual-Ad-2495 — 13 days ago

Been building a free reference site, and the prompt-related sections are the parts most relevant here:

https://www.ainews.tech/prompts — 100 prompts organized by job-to-be-done (writing, code, sales, research, design, productivity, learning, creative, analysis, communications). Each one has a use case, the actual prompt template with {{placeholders}}, and one-click "Open in ChatGPT/Claude/Gemini" buttons.

https://www.ainews.tech/skills — 128 hand-written Claude Skills across 12 packs. Each skill includes required inputs, structure, anti-patterns, and the actual instructions Claude follows. They're hand-written for specific recurring tasks, not auto-generated.

Free, no signup, MIT-licensed. The wider site has a glossary (RAG, CoT, few-shot, MCP, all explained), tool comparisons, and role-specific guides if useful.

Hopefully that can help someone out there. Have a great one!

u/Annual-Ad-2495 — 15 days ago